Tag: plane

  • Army saw spike in deadly aviation accidents in year before DC plane crash disaster

    Army saw spike in deadly aviation accidents in year before DC plane crash disaster

    Wednesday’s deadly collision between an American Airlines flight and a military helicopter outside Washington, D.C., followed the Army’s highest rate of flight mishaps in more than a decade. 

    Army aviation saw 17 class A mishaps, accidents that killed someone or caused more than $2.5 million worth of damage during fiscal year 2024. Fifteen of those were during flights, and two were ground aircraft mishaps. 

    That followed nine flight and one aircraft ground incidents in 2023 and four flight and four ground mishaps in 2022. 

    “FY24 will be a year that Army Aviation looks back on in hopes of never repeating,” stated a dismal Army report, released just before the deadly collision near Reagan National Airport that killed 67 people.

    THIRD SOLDIER INSIDE BLACK HAWK HELICOPTER INVOLVED IN DC MIDAIR COLLISION IDENTIFIED

    Capt. Rebecca M. Lobach, of Durham, North Carolina, was the third pilot identified in the Black Hawk crash last week. (Getty/US Army)

    Fiscal year 2024 saw the most class A mishaps per 100,000 flight hours since 2007. Nine soldiers and one civilian died in flight mishaps, while one contractor died in an aircraft ground accident, according to the report.  

    The 1.9 class A mishaps per 100,000 was nearly four times the rate of 2022, 0.5 per 100,000.

    In an average year, Army aviation mishaps kill six crew members. 

    There were 66 class A-C mishaps, meaning aviation incidents where over $60,000 worth of damage was incurred or personnel were injured enough to miss work. 

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    The UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter involved in the Washington, D.C.-area crash is not the force’s most accident-prone aircraft; it was only involved in one of the 2024 major incidents, while nine such incidents involved AH-64 Apaches.

    Last week’s crash was the first class A mishap for fiscal year 2025. 

    55 VICTIMS IN WASHINGTON, DC MIDAIR COLLISION PULLED FROM POTOMAC RIVER AS RECOVERY OPERATION CONTINUES

    Black Hawk

    The UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter involved in the Washington, D.C.-area crash is not the Army’s most accident-prone aircraft. (US Army-Cap. Adan Cezarez)

    The Navy had 11 Class A aviation mishaps in FY 2024, and the Marine Corps had six. Five Marines died in a CH-53E Super Stallion crash last February. The Air Force, which has more aviators than any other branch, had 20 class A mishaps in FY 2024. 

    The Army attributed the spike in incidents to an “ineffective safety culture.” 

    Its aviation review called for more recording and reviewing of flight footage with superiors after it found that the average flight experience is down 300 hours per aviator from 2013. While crew experience was not cited in every incident, the Army deemed it “a hazard that must be considered.”

    “While it’s understandable to have concerns about “big brother” monitoring, the primary goal of flight data analysis is to improve safety, not to punish or scrutinize individual pilots,” the Army’s Combat Readiness Center said in the report. 

    HARROWING VIDEO FROM MILITARY BASE SHOWS NEW ANGLE OF MIDAIR CRASH CATASTROPHE

    Search efforts in DC after a collision between an American Airlines jet and a U.S. Black Hawk helicopter

    This image shows the wreckage of a plane that collided with a Black Hawk over the Potomac River. (Leigh Green for Fox News Digital)

    After more than a dozen aviators died in the first half of fiscal year 2023, the Army conducted an aviation-wide stand down in April 2023, temporarily grounding all regular missions and training to assess safety issues. 

    However, the accidents continued. In April 2024, the Army executed a safety “stand up” with training on new safety protocols and procedures. After the stand up, the class A mishap rate for the remainder of FY 2024 dropped to 0.86 per 100,000 flight hours. 

    Last week Army secretary nominee Daniel Driscoll promised senators he would emphasize a “culture of safety” after the deadly crash, which he said “seems to be  preventable.” 

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    “There are appropriate times to take risk and there are inappropriate times to take risk,” he said. “I don’t know the details around this one, but after doing it, if confirmed, and working with this committee to figure out the facts, I think we might need to look at where is an appropriate time to take training risk, and it may not be near an airport like Reagan.”

    The Black Hawk, carrying three Army pilots, was conducting an “annual proficiency training flight” when it collided with a commercial regional jet from Wichita, Kansas, as it was on the descent to land at Reagan, according to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. 

    The Army did not immediately respond to a request for comment. 

  • King Charles says ‘our hearts’ with US after ‘devastating loss of life’ in DC plane crash

    King Charles says ‘our hearts’ with US after ‘devastating loss of life’ in DC plane crash

    King Charles III sent condolences Saturday to the U.S. and the families of the Washington, D.C., plane crash victims. 

    “My family and I have been profoundly shocked and saddened by the dreadful news of the tragic air accident in Washington, D.C., which has led to such a devastating loss of life,” the monarch said in a memo released by Buckingham Palace and shared by multiple news outlets. 

    “Our hearts, and our special thoughts, are with the people of the United States, and our deepest possible sympathy goes to the families and loved ones of all the victims.”

    Charles also said he wanted to pay “particular tribute to the emergency responders who acted so quickly to this horrendous event.” 

    DC PLANE CRASH INVESTIGATORS RECOVER AMERICAN AIRLINES BLACK BOXES AFTER MIDAIR COLLISION

    King Charles III sent his condolences to the U.S. and the families of the Washington, D.C., plane crash victims Saturday.  (Getty Images)

    On Wednesday night, 64 people were on board an American Airlines regional jet inbound to Reagan National Airport from Wichita, Kansas, when the plane collided with an Army Black Hawk helicopter carrying three soldiers, sending both aircraft into the Potomac and leaving no survivors. 

    The cause of the collision remains under investigation. 

    Search crews are still recovering bodies, and both aircraft remain in the Potomac River until they can be removed in a salvage operation. 

    The crash is the first commercial airline accident on U.S. soil since 2009, when 50 people were killed when a Buffalo, New York-bound plane stalled after takeoff. 

    The king also offered condolences in December for the victims of a Dec. 29 plane crash in South Korea that killed 179 people. 

    “My wife and I were profoundly saddened to learn of the horrific air accident at Muan, which resulted in such grievous loss of life,” he said at the time. “As the people of the Republic of Korea mourn this disaster, the families and loved ones of all the victims are in our prayers.”

    Recovery efforts underway after midair collision leaves 67 dead

    Emergency workers recover debris from the Potomac River Thursday after Wednesday night’s collision between American Eagle Flight 5342 and a Black Hawk helicopter. (Reuters/Carlos Barria)

    VICTIMS IDENTIFIED IN DC PLANE CRASH INVOLVING AMERICAN AIRLINES JET AND MILITARY HELICOPTER

    The royal family is no stranger to tragedy. Princess Diana was killed in a car crash in Paris in 1997, and Lord Louis Mountbatten, the late Queen Elizabeth’s second cousin, was killed in an Irish Republican Army terrorist bombing in Ireland in 1979. 

    The late queen’s uncle, Prince George, the Duke of Kent, also died in a plane crash in 1942 while visiting troops in Iceland. And her first cousin, Prince William, the Duke of Gloucester, died in 1972 while piloting a plane in a race during an air show in Staffordshire, England. 

    Then-Prince Charles piloting a Royal Air Force plane

    Prince Charles, seen here in 1971, learned to fly in the Royal Air Force.  (UPI/Bettmann Archive/Getty Images)

    The royal family is often in the air, flying to far-flung locations, and Prince Philip and King Charles both learned to fly in the military. Prince William and Prince Harry were also both helicopter pilots in the military. 

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    Charles had a scary incident while piloting a small, nonmilitary plane in 1994 over Scotland’s Inner Hebrides when he popped a tire and overshot a runway. 

    A year later, he gave up his pilot’s license.

  • Figure skating community mourns the loss of legend Dick Button in the wake of D.C. plane crash tragedy

    Figure skating community mourns the loss of legend Dick Button in the wake of D.C. plane crash tragedy

    The figure skating community experienced immense grief this week after 14 members of the community were tragically killed in a midair aircraft collision in Washington D.C. on Wednesday night. 

    Their loss came just a day before two-time Olympic gold medalist Dick Button, a pioneer in the sport who would also go on to have a legendary broadcasting career, died at 95. 

    FILE – Dick Button of Englewood, N.J., a North American men’s figure skating champion and winner of the European title, executes a jump during a practice session at St. Moritz, Switzerland, on Jan. 19, 1948, in preparation for the Winter Olympics of 1948.  (AP Photo, File)

    “On this terrible, sad day for figure skating with the loss of young upcoming talent and their family members and coaches in the plane crash, I am further heartbroken with the loss of figure skating legend, my friend, Dick Button,” Brian Boitano, who won a gold medal in the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary, wrote in a post on social media. 

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    “RIP, Dick Button,” former American sports reporter Michele Tafoya said in another post. 

    “I like to think you went to heaven in time to welcome the young skaters and coaches who perished in Wednesday’s tragedy. May you all glide among the stars together.” 

    Everly and Alydia Livingston were killed in a plane crash between an American Airlines flight and Army helicopter

    Everly and Alydia Livingston were killed in a plane crash between an American Airlines flight and an Army helicopter near Reagan National Airport in Arlington, Virginia on Wednesday, January 29, 2025. All 67 people onboard both aircraft are presumed dead.   (Instagram/@ice_skating_sisters)

    A winner of two Olympic gold medals, five consecutive world championships, seven straight U.S. titles, and three-straight North American titles, Button was one of the most accomplished men’s figure skaters. 

    OLYMPIC MEDALIST SCOTT HAMILTON RECALLS FINAL MEETING WITH CHAMPION RUSSIAN SKATERS DAYS BEFORE PLANE CRASH

    He was the first to land a double axel and triple jump in competition, both leading to victory at the Olympics. After his skating career ended, Button would enter the world of broadcasting, eventually earning the name “The Voice of Figure Skating.”

    Button died Thursday in North Salem, New York, his family confirmed Thursday.

    “U.S. Figure Skating mourns the loss of the legendary Dick Button,” the organization said in a statement. “The two-time Olympic champion’s pioneering style & award-winning television commentary revolutionized figure skating. His legacy will live on forever. We extend our deepest condolences to his family & loved ones.”

    Dick Button skating

    FILE – Dick Button, of Englewood, N.J., the reigning figure skating champion of the world, is shown tuning up at Oslo to defend his Olympic title in the Winter Games. He is performing a stag jump on Feb. 12, 1952 in Oslo, Norway.  (AP Images)

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    Olympic gold medalist Scott Hamilton spoke about Wednesday’s tragedy and loss of Button, a good friend, in an appearance on TODAY Friday. 

    Hamilton was in Wichita, Kansas, at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships and was familiar with some of the victims in Wednesday’s crash, including world champion pairs skaters Evgenia Shishkova and Vadim Naumov.

    “It’s just been beyond anything I can handle,” a tearful Hamilton said of the losses. 

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  • Nonprofit offers long-term grief support for loved ones of plane crash victims

    Nonprofit offers long-term grief support for loved ones of plane crash victims

    Heidi Snow Cinader knows all too well the deep pain that one experiences from losing a loved one in an airplane crash. After her fiancé died when TWA Flight 800 crashed in the Atlantic Ocean in 1996, she developed an air disaster bereavement support network to help others who faced similar losses. 

    Through her nonprofit, AirCraft Casualty Emotional Support Services or, ACCESS, Cinader has been helping facilitate the grieving process for people who have been affected by, or involved in, air disaster-related tragedies. For decades, her charity has been connecting those who have survived or lost loved ones in air disasters with professionally trained volunteers who have experienced similar tragedies in years past.

    The moment Cinader and her band of volunteers saw the debris of the American Airlines plane in the Potomac River after it collided with a Black Hawk military helicopter, it brought them back to the day when their lives were all “changed in an instant,” Cinader told FOX Business. 

    AMERICAN AIRLINES PLANE, ARMY HELICOPTER COLLIDE OUTSIDE REAGAN NATIONAL AIRPORT NEAR WASHINGTON DC

    “At our organization, we have the unenviable credentials of having lost loved ones in our disasters. And all these incredible people have come forward over the years from general aviation, commercial and military air crashes to really come forward to help other people get through their grief,” Cinader said. 

    Many of the people who are grief mentors now initially reached out for help themselves. A few years after their own loss, they became eligible to attend training and became grief mentors, offering support to others.

    Emergency response units assess the airplane wreckage in the Potomac River near Ronald Reagan Washington Airport on Jan. 30, 2025, in Arlington, Virginia.  (Andrew Harnik/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    PSA AIRLINES: WHAT TO KNOW ABOUT THE CARRIER INVOLVED IN THE DC MIDAIR COLLISION

    Several of the volunteers reached out after Wednesday’s crash, “asking how they can help and letting me know they’re on call, and they’re ready,” she said.

    A group of ACCESS volunteers, who help facilitate the grieving process for people who have been affected by or involved in air disaster-related tragedies. (Jeff Bayer )

    According to Cinader, these individuals are among the few who truly understand the pain of waiting to learn what caused the plane to crash, awaiting the recovery of bodies and being overwhelmed by constant media coverage.

    Aside from grief support, the nonprofit also helps those in crisis become aware of the resources available to them.

    “Through the ACCESS support system and referral services, we help individuals to overcome the feelings of hopelessness, isolation, despair, and confusion that often follow an air disaster,” the website says.

    “We help minimize the risk of post-traumatic stress symptoms, long-term depression, family difficulties or an inability to function socially or at work.”

    Plane crash recovery over Potomac River

    A helicopter flies near the crash site of the American Airlines plane on the Potomac River after the plane crashed on approach to Reagan National Airport. (Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images / Getty Images)

    The goal is to help people “gain renewed strength, hope, and purpose.” 

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    The nonprofit seeks to support people not just in the moments after an air disaster, but for the rest of their lives. This includes major life events like birthdays and times when people are getting remarried. 

    Finding someone else who knows “how to live a life for the long term” is really a big piece of what the organization does, Cinader said. 

    “I remember so well . . . when I needed somebody to be with me for what laid ahead,” Cinader said.

  • Eagles speak out on Philadelphia plane crash just days before playing in Super Bowl LIX

    Eagles speak out on Philadelphia plane crash just days before playing in Super Bowl LIX

    The Philadelphia Eagles will have plenty more to play for when they take the field in Super Bowl LIX next Sunday against the Kansas City Chiefs. 

    After an air ambulance carrying six people crashed in Northern Philadelphia Friday night, causing a massive explosion that has killed an unconfirmed number of people, the Eagles released a statement expressing condolences for its impacted Philadelphia residents and the victims on board the flight.

    “The Eagles organization was heartbroken to learn of the tragic loss of life earlier this evening as a result of the plane crash in Northeast Philadelphia,” the team said. “We extend our condolences to the victims and loved ones they leave behind. We are grateful to the first responders for their heroic actions at the scene.”

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    Jet Rescue Air Ambulance, the global ambulance flight company operating the plane, said its Learjet 55 crashed while departing from Northeast Philadelphia Airport at about 6:30 p.m.

    A detailed view of the Philadelphia Eagles logo at midfield prior to the game against the Dallas Cowboys at Lincoln Financial Field on November 1, 2020 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.  (Mitchell Leff/Getty Images)

    The plane was scheduled to fly from Philadelphia to Tijuana International Airport, with one technical stop in Springfield, Missouri for fuel, Air Ambulance spokesperson Shai Gold told Fox News Digital.

    A senior Philadelphia fire official told Fox News the fires that were sparked by the crash are “now under control.”

    President Donald Trump took to Truth Social to react to the tragedy.

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    “So sad to see the plane go down in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. More innocent souls lost. Our people are totally engaged,” Trump wrote. “First Responders are already being given credit for doing a great job. More to follow. God Bless you all.”

    Vice President JD Vance later took to X, calling the situation “very sad.”

    “May God bless the victims and their families,” Vance wrote.

    Site of a plane crash in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S., January 31, 2025.

    Site of a plane crash in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S., January 31, 2025.  (X / @JaredGSolomon)

    The crash comes just days after an American Airlines passenger plane collided midair with an Army Black Hawk Helicopter near Reagan National Airport, killing 67 people.

    Fox News Digital’s Alexandra Koch, Lorraine Taylor and Alexis McAdams contributed to this story.

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  • Air ambulance service involved in Philadelphia plane crash once flew MLB icon David Ortiz after he got shot

    Air ambulance service involved in Philadelphia plane crash once flew MLB icon David Ortiz after he got shot

    A medical transport jet headed for Missouri and carrying a child patient and five others crashed in Northeast Philadelphia Friday night. 

    The jet was part of the Jet Rescue Air Ambulance, which provides global ambulance flight services.

    It’s the same service that once helped transport Boston Red Sox legend and MLB Hall of Famer David Ortiz with a critical injury after he was shot in his home country of the Dominican Republic June 9, 2019, at a bar in Santo Domingo. 

    Ortiz was severely wounded but survived emergency surgery.

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    A portion of Ortiz’s intestines, colon and gallbladder were removed, and he also reportedly had liver damage. The next day, a Jet Rescue plane transported Ortiz to Boston, where he received further treatment at Massachusetts General Hospital, including a second surgery.

    Ortiz was moved out of the intensive care unit on June 22, 2019, and he was released from the hospital over a month later on July 26, 2019. 

    David Ortiz Aug. 16, 2024, in New York City (Dave Kotinsky/Getty Images for Fanatics)

    The suspected shooter was later identified as Rolfi Ferreira-Cruz, but an investigation also found Ortiz was not the intended target. The Dominican Attorney General announced June 19, 2019, Ortiz was shot by mistake, and Sixto David Fernandez was identified as the intended target of the shooting.

    On Friday, Jet Rescue said it’s Learjet 55 crashed while departing from Northeast Philadelphia Airport around 6:30 p.m.

    “Our immediate concern is for the patient’s family, our personnel, their families and other victims that may have been hurt on the ground,” Jet Rescue Air Ambulance said in a statement. 

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    President Donald Trump took to Truth Social to react to the tragedy.

    “So sad to see the plane go down in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. More innocent souls lost. Our people are totally engaged,” Trump wrote. “First Responders are already being given credit for doing a great job. More to follow. God Bless you all.”

    The crash comes just days after an American Airlines passenger plane collided with an Army Black Hawk Helicopter near Reagan National Airport, killing 67 people.

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  • ‘Unfit to lead’: Blue state governor lashes out at Trump for targeting DEI policies after DC plane crash

    ‘Unfit to lead’: Blue state governor lashes out at Trump for targeting DEI policies after DC plane crash

    Democratic Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker accused President Donald Trump of being too incompetent to lead the country because he suggested the Federal Aviation Administration’s (FAA) prioritization of diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) played a role in the tragic Washington, D.C., aircraft collision on Wednesday.

    “We face the unfortunate reality that we must be honest with the nation about: Donald Trump is unfit to lead during moments of crisis like this,” Pritzker said in a statement Thursday night. 

    The blue state governor, whom Trump evoked on the campaign trail as an example of the downfall of Democrat-run states, urged the Trump administration to respond to the American Airlines crash with “information and facts to instill confidence in our nation’s aviation safety.”

    “Before victims have even been identified, Trump is blaming people with disabilities,” Pritzker said, referring to FAA DEI hiring practices. “He’s blaming the U.S. service members in the Blackhawk helicopter. He’s blaming hiring programs he can’t even name or offer examples of. The buck stops with him — yet he is failing to demonstrate his role as protector of the American people and head of our government.”

    TRUMP ATTACKS DEI POLICIES AFTER DC PLANE CRASH, SAYS FAA EMPLOYEES MUST BE HELD TO ‘HIGHEST STANDARDS’

    President Joe Biden, right, is greeted by Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker upon arrival at Soldier Field Landing Zone on his way to the Democratic National Convention in Chicago on Aug. 19, 2024. (Reuters/Craig Hudson)

    The second-term governor is among the long list of Democrats considering a 2028 presidential run. Pritzker has seized opportunities over the past two weeks to play a leadership role in Democrat opposition to Trump, refusing, for example, to follow Trump’s executive order ending birthright citizenship. 

    PRITZKER BASHES TRUMP ORDER ON BIRTHRIGHT CITIZENSHIP: ‘WE WILL NOT FOLLOW AN UNCONSTITUTIONAL ORDER’

    Pritzker’s comments Thursday were the latest in a long-standing feud between the two. 

    “Sloppy J.B. Pritzker… has presided over the destruction and disintegration of Illinois at levels never seen before in any State,” Trump wrote on Truth Social in June. “Crime is rampant and people are, sadly, fleeing Illinois. Unless a change is made at the Governor’s level, Illinois can never be Great Again!”

    Trump’s attacks have veered into the ad hominem, labeling Pritzker a “rotund Governor from the once great State of Illinois, who makes Chris Christie look like a male model.”

    In his statement, Pritzker demanded the Trump administration answer his “critical questions,” including why the control tower was not fully staffed during the crash; why the Trump administration fired members of the Aviation Security Advisory Committee; whether the president now understands fully staffing federal agencies is a “matter of life and death”; and whether he plans to reverse federal workforce cuts. 

    Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker and Donald Trump split

    Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, right, slammed President Donald Trump’s leadership following the American Airlines crash. (AP/Getty)

    Pritzker questioned whether Elon Musk played a role in the removal of the former FAA director; why a replacement for FAA director was not named until after the crash; whether the federal government authorized the Blackhawk helicopter to fly on a commercial flight path; and if the government will continue allowing helicopters to fly at the same altitude as commercial planes.

    “Will the President, Vice President, Defense Secretary, and Transportation Secretary cooperate with the independent NTSB investigation and correct any misinformation they spread about the crash?” Pritzker demanded to know.

    Trump on Thursday listed headlines about Biden-era FAA DEI hiring that he suggested weakened the agency.

    “Here’s one,” Trump said in the White House briefing room. “The FAA’s diversity push includes focus on hiring people with severe intellectual and psychiatric disabilities. That is amazing. And then it says the FAA says people with severe disabilities, the most underrepresented segment of the workforce, and they want them in. They can be air traffic controllers. I don’t think so.”

    Donald Trump at podium

    President Donald Trump speaks in the James Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House in Washington, D.C., on Thursday. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

    “This was on January 14th, so that was a week before I entered office,” Trump said, seeking to push blame onto the Biden administration. “They put a big push to put diversity into the FAA’s program.

    Trump then expanded his list of conditions allowed among controllers: “Hearing, vision, missing extremities, partial paralysis, complete paralysis, epilepsy, severe intellectual disability, psychiatric disability, and dwarfism.”

    The president drew a stark contrast between Democratic policies and his own first-week executive orders that halted DEI programs in the federal government and restored “the highest standards of air traffic controllers.”

    “Brilliant people have to be in those positions,” he stated.

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    When asked how he came to the conclusion that diversity had something to do with the crash, the president said, “Because I have common sense.”

    Pritzker is not the only potential 2028 Democratic presidential contender who took issue with Trump’s comments. After Trump called former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg a “disaster,” Buttigieg, a 2020 Democratic primary candidate, called Trump’s comments “despicable.”

    “As families grieve, Trump should be leading, not lying,” he wrote on X. “We put safety first, drove down close calls, grew Air Traffic Control, and had zero commercial airline crash fatalities out of millions of flights on our watch. President Trump now oversees the military and the FAA. One of his first acts was to fire and suspend some of the key personnel who helped keep our skies safe.”

  • Olympic medalist Scott Hamilton recalls final meeting with champion Russian skaters days before plane crash

    Olympic medalist Scott Hamilton recalls final meeting with champion Russian skaters days before plane crash

    Olympic gold medalist Scott Hamilton held back tears on Friday as he remembered the victims from the figure skating community who died after an American Airlines flight traveling from development camp in Kansas to Washington, D.C., collided with an Army helicopter in midair late Wednesday night. 

    The four-time men’s singles world champion spoke fondly of the victims during an appearance on TODAY but called the reality of this week’s tragedy “overwhelming.” 

    Figure Skater Scott Hamilton of the United States competing in the figure skating competition in the XIV Olympic Winter Games circa 1984 in Sarajevo, Bosnia. ( Focus on Sport/Getty Images)

    “For this to happen just days after those championships were over is just devastating, shocking – it just doesn’t make any sense. . . .We’re no stranger to tragedy but this was just beyond devastation.”

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    Officials have said that 14 skaters, coaches and family members were aboard American Airlines Flight 5342 when it collided with a UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter near Reagan Washington National Airport, near D.C., at around 9 p.m. local time. 

    Many of the victims have been identified, including Evgenia Shishkova and Vadim Naumov, the renowned ice skating coaches who won a world championship title together in 1994. 

    Evgenia Shishkova and Vadim Naumov of Russia execute

    World champions Evgenia Shishkova and Vadim Naumov of Russia execute a throw during the pairs short competition at the World Figure Skating competition in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, on March 19, 1996.  (Dave Buston/The Canadian Press via AP, File)

    YOUNG FIGURE SKATING SISTERS FROM VIRGINIA AMONG VICTIMS KILLED IN DC PLANE CRASH

    Hamilton became emotional when he spoke of the couple, who settled in America to become coaches following their successful career, which culminated in two Olympic appearances. He saw them just days before the crash while attending the U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Kansas.

    “I actually sat with them for a nice visit in Wichita,” Hamilton recalled Friday.”

    “To think that they’re gone is, um, I can’t wrap my head around the last 36 hours. It’s just been devastating, and the loss is just beyond description. My heart is shattered.” 

    Evgenia Shishkova and Vadim Naumov

    Evgenia Shishkova and Vadim Naumov of Russia perform during free skating in the pairs event of the NHK Trophy International Figure Skating Competition at Nagoya, Japan, on Dec. 9, 1995. AP Photo/Shizuo Kambayashi, File

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    Shishkova and Naumov married in Saint Petersburg, Russia, in 1995, and they moved to Connecticut. They had a son, Maxim, who competed in men’s singles in the U.S. He was in Kansas but did not travel back with his parents. The Russian pair were coaches for the Skating Club of Boston.

    Sixty passengers and four crew members on the American Airlines plane and three soldiers aboard a training flight on the helicopter are presumed dead. 

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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  • Young figure skating sisters from Virginia among victims killed in DC plane crash

    Young figure skating sisters from Virginia among victims killed in DC plane crash

    Alydia and Everly Livingston, who were known as the “Ice Skating Sisters,” were identified as victims of the deadly plane crash in Washington, D.C., that claimed the lives of 67 people when an American Airlines plane collided with an Army helicopter Wednesday night. 

    Eleven-year-old Alydia and 14-year-old Everly, were killed in the crash along with their parents, Peter and Donna Livingston.

    Everly and Alydia Livingston were killed in a crash involving an American Airlines plane and an Army helicopter near Reagan National Airport in Arlington, Va., Wednesday, Jan., 29, 2025. All 67 people aboard the two aircraft are presumed dead.   (Facebook/Peter Livingston)

    The girls were members of the Washington Figure Skating Club in D.C., which is affiliated with U.S. Figure Skating.

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    The club released a joint statement with the Skating Club of Northern Virginia after several of the victims were linked to the clubs.

    “This heartbreaking accident has shaken the local skating community in Virginia, Maryland, the District of Columbia — as well as in Boston and across the nation. Our hearts go out to families, friends, and loved ones mourning this unimaginable grief.

    Everly and Alydia Livingston were killed in a plane crash between an American Airlines flight and Army helicopter

    Everly and Alydia Livingston were killed in a crash involving an American Airlines plane and an Army helicopter near Reagan National Airport in Arlington, Va., Wednesday, Jan. 29, 2025. All 67 people aboard the two aircraft are presumed dead.   (Instagram/@ice_skating_sisters)

    WIFE OF DELAWARE SKATING COACH KILLED IN DC PLANE CRASH LEFT DEVASTATED BY TRAGEDY: ‘I LOST EVERYTHING’

    “As we continue to process this tragedy, we honor the memories of those who we have lost — their passion for the sport, the friendships they cultivated, and the joy they brought to the ice. Their presence at our rinks and in our community is deeply felt, and their absence is indescribable.”

    In a tribute posted to The Skating Lesson Facebook page, Alydia was described as having a “vivacious personality” and a true passion for the sport. Her older sister, Everly, was said to be more “shy,” but that changed when she was on the ice. 

    Donna Smojice Livingston was killed in a plane crash between an American Airlines flight and Army helicopter

    Donna Smojice Livingston was killed in the crash involving an American Airlines plane and an Army helicopter near Reagan National Airport in Arlington, Va., Wednesday, Jan. 29, 2025. All 67 people aboard the two aircraft are presumed dead.  (Facebook/Donna Smojice Livingston)

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    In a final post shared to the girls’ joint Instagram, the sisters posed for a picture at the U.S. Figure Skating Championships in Wichita, Kansas, which concluded Sunday. According to a statement from U.S. Figure Skating, several of its members were aboard the American Airlines flight after a development camp held after the championships. 

    Peter Livingston was killed in a plane crash between an American Airlines flight and Army helicopter

    Peter Livingston was killed in a crash involving an American Airlines plane and an Army helicopter near Reagan National Airport in Arlington, Va., Wednesday, Jan. 29, 2025. All 67 people aboard the two aircraft are presumed dead.  (Facebook/Peter Livingston)

    Several victims have been identified in the days since the accident. Officials say 14 of the 67 victims belonged to the skating community. 

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  • Inside the DC plane crash investigation: Air traffic staff a ‘small piece’ of ‘very big puzzle,’ official says

    Inside the DC plane crash investigation: Air traffic staff a ‘small piece’ of ‘very big puzzle,’ official says

    Following a bombshell report over the alleged air traffic control staffing on the night of the tragic American Airlines and Black Hawk helicopter collision in D.C., the National Transportation Safety Board’s (NTSB) designated spokesperson for the incident warned that “a lot of questions remain” about the events leading up to the crash.

    “Let me say this first: we [have] to remember 67 people lost their lives… Today will be yet another day of the teams going out there,” NTSB member Todd Inman told FOX Business’ Grady Trimble on Friday.

    “They’re out in the field. They’re collecting data. They’ve started interviews. We have hundreds of people in this investigation,” he continued. “But the most important thing right now is to obtain and preserve any perishable evidence so that whenever we come off scene, we can start the analyzation of it.”

    An internal preliminary report from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), obtained by the Associated Press, allegedly showed that the number of staff members working at the air control tower at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport (DCA) in Arlington, Virginia, was “not normal for the time of day and volume of traffic.”

    EXPERT PUTS ONUS ON F.A.A. FOR AMERICAN AIRLINES, HELICOPTER CRASH: ‘BAD MANAGEMENT’ IS ‘PUTTING US AT RISK’

    On Wednesday night, an American Airlines plane and an Army helicopter collided near Reagan National Airport outside of Washington, D.C. All 67 people onboard both aircraft are presumed dead.

    NTSB member Todd Inman told FOX Business “we don’t use the word normal per say,” when discussing air traffic control staff. (Getty Images)

    “We don’t use the word normal per se,” Inman reacted. “What happens immediately after an accident is a safety review team begins doing just what we said, perishable evidence. And this is a lot of different people from the FAA. Union representatives all immediately start gaining information.

    “So what people are talking about is a rough draft of something, but it is a small piece of a very big puzzle. Thousands of data points,” he added. “So ultimately [it led] to our recommendation of how to prevent this tragedy from occurring again.”

    The FAA report also claimed that one air traffic controller was working two positions at the time of the crash, when typically, the two assignments are split between two air traffic controllers.

    “Airports are living, breathing cities. So at any time because of weather, because of traffic, because of any other issue, you could see fluctuations in staff up and down. Now, is that an acceptable standard for safety? We will investigate that, and we’re going to find out. If there was anything that needs to be remediated, [we] will then make recommendations,” Inman responded.

    Inman pointed out that the NTSB will be closely evaluating evidence like cockpit communications, unique sound recordings, aileron positions, landing gear, altitude pitch, submerged electronics, debris and even interviewing staff that were working with both aircraft.

    President Donald Trump has also chimed in on the investigation, claiming via Truth Social that the Army helicopter may have been flying too high, “far above the 200 foot limit” in the DCA airspace.

    Victims identified in DC plane crash involving American Airlines jet and military helicopter

    Victims identified in DC plane crash involving American Airlines jet and military helicopter (Getty Images / Getty Images)

    “I would be very careful to anyone who’s listening to this to rely upon off-the-shelf software speculation they’re seeing online,” Inman noted. “Our job is to get the absolute facts as we get these [black] boxes in and get them analyzed, and we look at more granular data, [we’ll] be able to give a much better picture on that.

    “In fact, I would just make sure you remember there can be a 50-foot difference in some cases and up to 100 yards for radar versus Ads-b, which is more GPS based. But it’s still not as accurate as what’s in the plane itself.”

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    The NTSB plans to “take [their] time” on the investigation, pledging to follow through all evidence “as long as it takes” to get to the root of what happened Wednesday night.

    “We’ve done over 100,000 aviation accident investigations, made 15,000 recommendations,” Inman said. “Right now, we’ve not found anything. But if we do, we will immediately tell the public. Our job is to prevent this tragedy from happening again.”

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    Fox News’ Greg Wehner contributed to this report.